OpenAI and Figma launch bidirectional code-to-design integration via MCP protocol. Codex usage up 400% in 2026 with enterprise adoption from Cisco, NVIDIA, RampOpenAI and Figma launch bidirectional code-to-design integration via MCP protocol. Codex usage up 400% in 2026 with enterprise adoption from Cisco, NVIDIA, Ramp

OpenAI Codex Integrates Figma as AI Coding Tool Hits 1M Weekly Users

2026/03/18 22:43
3 min read
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OpenAI Codex Integrates Figma as AI Coding Tool Hits 1M Weekly Users

James Ding Mar 18, 2026 14:43

OpenAI and Figma launch bidirectional code-to-design integration via MCP protocol. Codex usage up 400% in 2026 with enterprise adoption from Cisco, NVIDIA, Ramp.

OpenAI Codex Integrates Figma as AI Coding Tool Hits 1M Weekly Users

OpenAI's Codex coding agent now connects directly to Figma's design platform through a new MCP server integration, allowing developers and designers to shuttle work between code and visual canvas without context switching. The partnership announcement on March 17, 2026 comes as Codex crosses 1 million weekly active users with usage growth exceeding 400% since January.

The integration works both directions. Engineers can pull Figma Design, Figma Make, or FigJam assets directly into Codex for implementation. More notably, they can now convert existing UI code into editable Figma designs—a workflow that previously required manual recreation or third-party tools with spotty results.

What the MCP Connection Actually Does

MCP (Model Context Protocol) is an open-source standard that lets AI agents interface with external applications. In practice, this means Codex can read and write to Figma files natively rather than relying on screenshots or exported assets.

"It doesn't assume you're 'a designer' or 'an engineer' first," said Alexander Embiricos, Codex product lead. "Engineers can iterate visually without leaving their flow, and designers can work closer to real implementation without becoming full-time coders."

The practical upside: a developer can prototype UI changes in code, push them to Figma for stakeholder feedback, incorporate revisions on the canvas, then pull those changes back into the codebase. Previously this round-trip meant lost fidelity at each handoff.

Enterprise Traction Building

Cisco, NVIDIA, Ramp, and Datadog have deployed Codex across their engineering teams, alongside AI-native startups like Harvey and Sierra. Figma itself runs ChatGPT Enterprise internally.

Codex has evolved significantly since its April 2025 CLI launch. The tool now ships as a terminal CLI, IDE extension, web interface, and macOS desktop app. The desktop version enables parallel agent sessions—users can have multiple Codex tasks running simultaneously while working on other things.

This marks a different product than the original Codex API that OpenAI discontinued in March 2023. The current iteration runs as an autonomous agent powered by codex-1 (a specialized o3 variant), capable of executing tests and creating pull requests in sandboxed environments.

Why This Matters for Builders

Figma's Chief Design Officer Loredana Crisan framed the integration around iteration speed: "Teams can build on their best ideas—not just their first idea—by combining the best of code with the creativity, collaboration, and craft that comes with Figma's infinite canvas."

The subtext is competitive positioning. As AI coding tools proliferate, integrations with the tools teams already use become differentiators. Figma claims over 4 million paying customers; connecting Codex to that user base creates stickiness for both platforms.

Users can install the Figma MCP server directly through the Codex desktop app. The integration ships immediately with no waitlist.

Image source: Shutterstock
  • openai
  • codex
  • figma
  • ai development tools
  • enterprise ai
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